United States Marine Corps veteran Sgt. Kirstie Ennis nearly died while serving in Afghanistan, but now she is on a new mission to compete in the Paralympics as a champion snowboarder.

Ennis, 24, was honored at the Bob Woodruff Foundation’s annual “Stand Up for Heroes” event in New York on Tuesday, recognized for her bravery and shared a message of hope and strength.

“Like everyone else in the front rows tonight, I do not want anyone’s pity,” she told the audience. “We want people to push and challenge us to be better in order to grasp a new sense of purpose and direction.”

Ennis nearly lost her life in June 2012. She was serving as an aerial gunner in Afghanistan when her helicopter went down.

“The first six months after I got hurt, my life fell apart -- it was falling apart in front of me,” she said. “I had no jaw, I had no teeth. I couldn’t communicate to my family. I couldn’t even identify who my family really was. I faced some extreme trials.”

The crash left her with a shattered jaw, a broken leg, damage to her spine, burns, a hearing impairment and a traumatic brain injury. Doctors told her she would never walk again.

But she did more than walk.

After 38 surgeries to repair her body, Ennis picked up snowboarding and found that it gave her life new meaning. She had never gone snowboarding before she was wounded, she said, and now she is ranked fifth internationally for women’s Paralympic snowboarding and is on track to compete in the 2018 Paralympics.

“Yes, I am classified as a disabled person, I’m handicapped, but if I can go out and do something like this I couldn’t do before, I mean, that gives you the power and the strength to try and overcome anything at that point,” Ennis said.

Earlier this fall, Ennis trekked 1,000 miles across Great Britain with five other veterans as part of the Walking With the Wounded team. To honor the sacrifice of fellow soldiers who can’t walk with them anymore, they placed dog tags with names of the fallen along the route.

“I lost 25 brothers, whether they were killed in action or they came home and lost their fight to PTSD,” Ennis said, referring to post-traumatic stress disorder.